Just Label It News Roundup 10-12

The sale of glyphosate to non-professionals has been banned in Belgium. This ban went into effect on last Saturday. The sale of selective herbicides to non-professionals will be banned at the close of the year. A new study shows the CRISPR gene, a DNA-cutting enzyme used for genetic modification, can create large deletions and shuffle genes. The fields and back roads of eastern Arkansas were a crime scene this past summer when state inspectors stopped alongside fields to pick up dying weeds. The state inspectors tested the liquids in farmers’ pesticide sprayers and in many cases, they found evidence that farmers were using a banned pesticide. Also in the news, U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Sonny Perdue praised the Department of Justice’s decision to request a rehearing of a pesticide case before the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals. This come on the heels on the European Court of Justice’s ruling requiring organisms developed using new genetic engineering techniques to undergo GMO risk assessments, and several new studies revealing “genetic havoc” as a result of gene editing, Friends of the Earth and Logos Environmental released a new report that highlights the risks to human health and our environment. The Santa Rosa City Council banned the use of synthetic weed-killers like Roundup at dozens of parks, buildings and medians around town. The Council’s decision came on a unanimous vote — with Mayor Chris Coursey absent and low audience turnout — to approve a one-year extension of the contract with a company that has provided city landscape maintenance services since 2014. A former biotech insider wants his GMO crops pulled over concerns of human health dangers.

The Belgian government has published its long-promised ban on the sale of broad-spectrum herbicides (such as glyphosate) to non-professional users. The ban will enter into force on Saturday 6 October 2018. The sale of selective herbicides to non-professionals will be banned as of 31 December 2018.

A new study by Jonathan Giacomini and his former advisor, evolutionary ecologist Lynn Adler at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, with others, found that eating sunflower pollen dramatically and consistently reduced a protozoan pathogen infection in bumble bees and reduced a microsporidian pathogen of the European honey bee, raising the possibility that sunflowers may provide a simple solution to improve the health of economically and ecologically important pollinators.

The fields and back roads of eastern Arkansas were a crime scene this past summer. State inspectors stopped alongside fields to pick up dying weeds. They tested the liquids in farmers’ pesticide sprayers. In many cases, they found evidence that farmers were using a banned pesticide. Dozens of farmers could face thousands of dollars in fines.

U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Sonny Perdue praised the Department of Justice’s (DOJ) decision to request a rehearing of a pesticide case before the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals. DOJ has asked for a panel rehearing and a rehearing en banc in a case in which the court directed the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to ban chlorpyrifos, a common and useful pesticide, within 60 days.

On the heels on the European Court of Justice’s ruling requiring organisms developed using new genetic engineering techniques to undergo GMO risk assessments, and several new studies revealing “genetic havoc” as a result of gene editing, Friends of the Earth and Logos Environmental released a new report, Gene-edited organisms in agriculture: Risks and unexpected consequences.

The Santa Rosa City Council banned the use of synthetic weed-killers like Roundup at dozens of parks, buildings and medians around town. The decision came on a unanimous vote — with Mayor Chris Coursey absent and barely any audience in the council chambers — to approve a one-year extension of the contract with a company that has provided city landscape maintenance services since 2014.